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.TH RPCAPD @MAN_ADMIN_COMMANDS@ "20 January 2023"
.SH NAME
rpcapd \- capture daemon to be controlled by a remote libpcap application
.SH SYNOPSIS
.na
rpcapd
[
.B \-b
.I address
] [
.B \-p
.I port
] [
.B \-4
] [
.B \-l
.I host_list
]
.ti +8
[
.B \-a
.IR host , port
] [
.B \-n
] [
.B \-v
] [
.B \-d
] [
.B \-i
]
.ti +8
[
.B \-D
] [
.B \-s
.I config_file
]
[
.B \-f
.I config_file
]
[
.B \-S
]
.ti +8
[
.B \-K
.I ssl_keyfile
] [
.B \-X
.I ssl_certfile
] [
.B \-C
]
.br
.ad
.SH DESCRIPTION
.LP
\fIRpcapd\fP is a daemon (Unix) or service (Win32) that allows the capture
and filter part of libpcap to be run on a remote system.
.LP
Rpcapd can run in two modes: passive mode (default) and active mode.
.LP
In passive mode, the client (e.g., a network sniffer) connects to
.IR rpcapd .
The client then sends the appropriate commands to
.I rpcapd
to start the capture.
.LP
In active mode,
.I rpcapd
tries to establish a connection toward the client
(e.g., a network sniffer). The client then sends the appropriate commands
to rpcapd to start the capture.
.LP
Active mode is useful in case
.I rpcapd
is run behind a firewall and
cannot receive connections from the external world. In this case,
.I rpcapd
can be configured to establish the connection to a given host,
which has to be configured in order to wait for that connection. After
establishing the connection, the protocol continues its job in almost
the same way in both active and passive mode.
.SH Configuration file
.LP
The user can create a configuration file in the same directory as the
executable, and put the configuration commands in there. In order for
.I rpcapd
to execute the commands, it needs to be restarted on Win32, i.e.
the configuration file is parsed only at the beginning. The UNIX
version of
.I rpcapd
will reread the configuration file upon receiving a
.B HUP
signal. In that case, all the existing connections remain in place,
while the new connections will be created according to the new parameters.
.LP
In case a user does not want to create the configuration file manually,
they can launch
.I rpcapd
with the desired flags plus
.BR "-s filename" .
Rpcapd will parse all the parameters and save them into the specified
configuration file.
.SH Installing rpcapd on Win32
.LP
The remote daemon is installed automatically when installing WinPcap.
The installation process places the
.I rpcapd
executable file into the WinPcap folder.
This file can be executed either from the command line, or as a service.
For instance, the installation process updates the list of available
services list and it creates a new item (Remote Packet Capture Protocol
v.0 (experimental)). To avoid security problems, the service is
inactive and it has to be started manually (control panel -
administrative tools - services - start).
.LP
The service has a set of "standard" parameters, i.e. it is launched
with the
.B \-d
flag (in order to make it run as a service) and the
.B "-f rpcapd.ini"
flag.
.SH Starting rpcapd on Win32
.LP
The
.I rpcapd
executable can be launched directly, i.e. it can run in the
foreground as well (not as a daemon/service). The procedure is quite
simple: you have to invoke the executable from the command line with all
the requested parameters except for the
.B \-d
flag. The capture server will
start in the foreground.
.SH Installing rpcapd on Unix-like systems
TBD
.SH Starting rpcapd on Unix-like systems
.I rpcapd
needs sufficient privileges to perform packet capture, e.g.
run as root or be owned by root and have suid set. Most operating
systems provide more elegant solutions when run as user than the
above solutions, all of them different.
.LP
If your system supports
.BR systemd (1)
and the corresponding
.B rpcapd.socket
and
.B rpcapd@.service
service files have been
installed, the rpcapd service can be enabled by enabling the
.B rpcapd.socket
unit.
.LP
If your system supports
.BR launchd (@MAN_ADMIN_COMMANDS@)
and the
.B org.tcpdump.rpcapd.plist
file has been installed, the rpcapd service can be enabled by loading
the
.B org.tcpdump.rpcapd
service.
.LP
If your system supports
.BR inetd (@MAN_ADMIN_COMMANDS@)
and the
.B rpcapd.inetd.conf
entry has been added to
.BR inetd.conf (@MAN_FILE_FORMATS@),
the rpcapd service can be enabled by telling inetd
to reread its configuration file.
.LP
If your system supports
.BR xinetd (@MAN_ADMIN_COMMANDS@)
and the
.B rpcapd.xinetd.conf
entry has been added to
.BR xinetd.conf (@MAN_FILE_FORMATS@),
the rpcapd service can be enabled by telling xinetd
to reread its configuration file.
.SH OPTIONS
.TP
.BI \-b " address"
Bind to the IP address specified by
.I address
(either numeric or literal).
By default,
.I rpcapd
binds to all local IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.
.TP
.BI \-p " port"
Bind to the port specified by
.IR port .
By default,
.I rpcapd
binds to port 2002.
.TP
.B \-4
Listen only on IPv4 addresses.
By default,
.I rpcapd
listens on both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.
.TP
.BI \-l " host_list"
Only allow hosts specified in the
.I host_list
argument to connect to this server.
.I host_list
is a list of host names or IP addresses, separated by commas.
We suggest that you use host names rather than literal IP addresses
in order to avoid problems with different address families.
.TP
.B \-n
Permit NULL authentication (usually used with the
.B \-l
flag).
.TP
.BI \-a " host" , "port"
Run in active mode, connecting to host
.I host
on port
.IR port .
In case
.I port
is omitted, the default port (2003) is used.
.TP
.B -v
Run in active mode only; by default, if
.B \-a
is specified,
.I rpcapd
accepts passive connections as well.
.TP
.B \-d
Run in daemon mode (UNIX only) or as a service (Win32 only).
Warning (Win32): this flag is specified automatically when
the service is started from the control panel.
.TP
.B \-i
Run in inetd mode (UNIX only).
.TP
.B \-D
Log debugging messages.
.TP
.BI \-s " config_file"
Save the current configuration to
.I config_file
in the format specified by
.BR rpcapd-config (@MAN_FILE_FORMATS@).
.TP
.BI \-f " config_file"
Load the current configuration from
.I config_file
in the format specified by
.BR rpcapd-config (@MAN_FILE_FORMATS@)
and ignore all flags specified on the command line.
.TP
.B \-h
Print this help screen.
.LP
If
.I rpcapd
was compiled with SSL support, the following options are also
available:
.TP
.B \-S
Require that SSL be used on connections.
.TP
.B \-C
With SSL enabled, XXX - I'm not sure how *fetching* the list of
compression mechanisms does anything to compression.
.TP
.BI \-S " ssl_keyfile"
With SSL enabled, use
.I ssl_keyfile
as the SSL key file.
.TP
.BI \-X " ssl_certfile"
With SSL enabled, use
.I ssl_certfile
as the SSL certificate file.
.br
.ad
.SH "SEE ALSO"
.BR pcap (3PCAP),
.BR rpcapd-config (@MAN_FILE_FORMATS@)